Gunsmithing New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Darkstar</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
They may require a little more effort to clean up, but you can readily get parts for them and once you are set up you will be rewarded with better finishes, tighter tolerance holding abilities and repeatability that the Chinese shit will never be able to give you. </div></div>


Wanna bet? My larger lathe at home is the G0509G 16" x 40" gunsmith lathe (Chinese made lathe with Japanese bearings and quality controlled by Grizzly inspectors) that I had loaned to go to the SHOT Show for a couple of years. Gordy Gritters was chambering barrels at the Grizzly booth using my lathe while talking to people and answering questions. Both barrels had absolute ZERO runout in the chambers. Yes, <span style="font-weight: bold">ZERO</span>. He was using a .0001" dial and the needle was not moving. This was done in front of at least eight or nine people, including an English gunsmith (fellow F-Class shooter) who said that in all the years he had been around gunsmiths, he had never seen that before. He had watched the whole chambering process from start to finish. I regularly use this lathe to re-crown my barrels and easily stay within .0001" runout. I leave the chambering of my guns to Gordy.

Another gunsmith I know, who uses a "tatty" lathe, once said to me "It does not matter how good your tool is, it is how you use it".

Granted, there is a lot of junk out there from China and they have not mastered the art of making high precision machine tools as a general rule, but there can be some gems out there, particularly if there is a company that stands behind their products.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

Agree with the above,..not all that is Chinese is junk. If it was then most of the electrical guidance/flight/fire control systems our respective armed forces use would fall apart!
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

I have friends that tell me:
Hondas are junk.
Don't drive one of those to work.
Get a 1971 Ford truck.
All the parts are available.
Buy American and just keep fixing it.

I was off road yesterday in a 1971.

But I have gone the other route, and I walk into a Honda showroom and sign the check.

I have owned a 1967 American big lathe.
I now have a Chinese big lathe.

I don't really like rebuilding lathes or cars.

 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Papagrizzly</div><div class="ubbcode-body">If it isn't, let me know and we will do all we can to satisfy you.

Thank you for your business. </div></div>

Please let me have one thats comming this month!!

I can't wait until the August shipment!

Plesae, Please....
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

LOL! I am like that, too. Once the decision is made, gotta have it yesterday.

Those things are hot. We just got a shipment in, but have a lot of back orders to fill. PM me your name and I will certainly give you a heads up as to where you are in the line.

Many more on the way and tons on order.

Thanks.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Papagrizzly</div><div class="ubbcode-body">LOL! I am like that, too. Once the decision is made, gotta have it yesterday.

Those things are hot. We just got a shipment in, but have a lot of back orders to fill. PM me your name and I will certainly give you a heads up as to where you are in the line.

Many more on the way and tons on order.

Thanks.</div></div>

I thought I saw somewhere that you bought Southbend and started to manufacture them again, am I dilusional?
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

Not dilusional.

I own South Bend Lathe Company as well and we have started to manufacture a broad range of high-end machines, in Taiwan. Before the naysayers come out of the woodwork, Taiwan is a US ally and our US Government accepts Taiwan made machines as those from an ally.

These new South Bends are top quality machines (and cost accordingly) being made with top shelf components. Several new models are coming out soon that have been designed from scratch.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Papagrizzly</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Darkstar</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
They may require a little more effort to clean up, but you can readily get parts for them and once you are set up you will be rewarded with better finishes, tighter tolerance holding abilities and repeatability that the Chinese shit will never be able to give you. </div></div>


Wanna bet? My larger lathe at home is the G0509G 16" x 40" gunsmith lathe (Chinese made lathe with Japanese bearings and quality controlled by Grizzly inspectors) that I had loaned to go to the SHOT Show for a couple of years. Gordy Gritters was chambering barrels at the Grizzly booth using my lathe while talking to people and answering questions. Both barrels had absolute ZERO runout in the chambers. Yes, <span style="font-weight: bold">ZERO</span>. He was using a .0001" dial and the needle was not moving. This was done in front of at least eight or nine people, including an English gunsmith (fellow F-Class shooter) who said that in all the years he had been around gunsmiths, he had never seen that before. He had watched the whole chambering process from start to finish. I regularly use this lathe to re-crown my barrels and easily stay within .0001" runout. I leave the chambering of my guns to Gordy.

Another gunsmith I know, who uses a "tatty" lathe, once said to me "It does not matter how good your tool is, it is how you use it".

Granted, there is a lot of junk out there from China and they have not mastered the art of making high precision machine tools as a general rule, but there can be some gems out there, particularly if there is a company that stands behind their products. </div></div>

Like I said, They have issues with consistent quality, one may work acceptable and the next one will be a dump.
Your choice to buy and your good luck if you get a winner. I still stand by my recommendation to find an older american tool room lathe if at all possible.

I work in many industries that have not had your luck. But I also dont have the luxury of a 1, 2, 5 or even 10 machine environment. I design flex manufacturing cells and production lines with upwards to 30 machine tools in them with automated material handling and in process inspection.
Oggling over one spindle? Hey man Im Glad you and some of the others have 1 or 2, but all the machines in the cells and lines I design and develop (mills, lathes, grinders, edm's) need to be on that level of your one with no bullshit from sales reps or engineers as to why they are not..
I will be the first to say my requirements most certainly drive my opinions.

As far as the "its not the machine its how you use it", well thats a real nice emotional statement with great limitations. A shit machine will not produce quality parts just because mister talent and his magic tool box shows up. Seen that act one time to many, and all the cost overrides that come with it.

There is probably a lot of more educated ways I can say this but !FUCK CHINA!
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Papagrizzly</div><div class="ubbcode-body">"There is probably a lot of more educated ways I can say this but !FUCK CHINA!"
_________________________


Holding back your feelings, are you? hahahaha! </div></div>


HA!
I hear ya man, but after contributing proudly for 37 years to American Industry producing precision machined components and assemblies and to now hear praise about China anything just flat sets me off.
To those who are of tender eyes and were oh so hurt as you read my lines, I apologize. NOT!

Do what you have to to keep your doors open, especially in this screwed up economy. But at the end of the day, dont complain about the leverage China has now and in the future, or how they will continue to negatively impact the remainder of our manufacturing and technologies base. Every sale of every product matters. At least to me.

Did I mention Screw China???
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Darkstar</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Do what you have to to keep your doors open, especially in this screwed up economy.</div></div>

You have every right to feel as you do.

The way I look at it is that the business we do selling machines imported from wherever goes to feed 300+ American families (people that work for us), plus the countless indirect jobs we create from longshoremen at the ports when the stuff comes in, to the truckers who move our containers, to the UPS drivers and warehousemen that move the thousands of packages we ship daily, to the truckers that move the tens of thousands of pounds of machines we ship daily to the customers, to the printers that print our catalogs and other printing material etc, etc.

Then, the money made also goes to feed this absurdly expensive shooting hobby
smile.gif
. Locally (USA) made actions, local gunsmith, local stockmaker, dozens and dozens of locally made barrels, thousands of locally made bullets a year. My wife has no idea!

Yup, gotta have those imported machines.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

I look at it somewhat differently, I guess.

To me, my money goes where it gets me the most (I have to, I'm a capitalist). What Grizzly does provides a valuable service. People that wouldn't otherwise be able to afford machines can (I have a Grizzly lathe and mill). Don't even start talking to me about old American iron. I live in New Mexico -- it doesn't exist here.

You're right, importing machines probably made some businesses close their doors. It's sad, but business is tough. Why should people pay more because some business can't compete?

This same argument is used against Walmart. In my town, we have a couple of Walmarts and a couple of grocery stores have closed their doors. We also have some specialty shops that were opened by people that didn't try to compete with Walmart but do things that Walmart can't (large selection of imported products). The bottom line is now we have the best of both worlds. Lower income people shop at Walmart and save money. People that can afford it shop at the specialty stores. Everybody wins.

What the US needs to do is find those things with which we can compete and quit complaining about those things where we can't.

Brad
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Papagrizzly</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Darkstar</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Do what you have to to keep your doors open, especially in this screwed up economy.</div></div>

You have every right to feel as you do.

The way I look at it is that the business we do selling machines imported from wherever goes to feed 300+ American families (people that work for us), plus the countless indirect jobs we create from longshoremen at the ports when the stuff comes in, to the truckers who move our containers, to the UPS drivers and warehousemen that move the thousands of packages we ship daily, to the truckers that move the tens of thousands of pounds of machines we ship daily to the customers, to the printers that print our catalogs and other printing material etc, etc.

Then, the money made also goes to feed this absurdly expensive shooting hobby
smile.gif
. Locally (USA) made actions, local gunsmith, local stockmaker, dozens and dozens of locally made barrels, thousands of locally made bullets a year. My wife has no idea!

Yup, gotta have those imported machines. </div></div>

I most certainly disagree. I see you have a feel for the economic food chain.
The issue I see with the scenairo you described is that China is at the top of the food chain and the US is sitting at the bottom being spoon fed by trickle down effect. All the jobs you mentioned for as important as they are to the individuals are in a large part dependent on a foreign power that is far from what would be considered one of the true US allies.
For the US, this is not the position of a world power, this a position of dependence.

If you dont have this link I pasted below I would ask you and all to copy it and watch it every now and then. Its a reality check to our actions internal and external. There is alot of information here and sometines it may be alot to take in. If you think what it shows at present is bad, bare in mind this does not include yet the cost of the new health care bill that was shoved down our throats.

On the right is the dept to gdp ratio both public and external. The scenario you described to me that you seem to feel is acceptable continues to drive the US % higher and drive Chinas % lower.
Ultimately what made US the prominent world power after WW2 is now what is making China the upcoming prominent world power.

http://www.usdebtclock.org/
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: JBM</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I look at it somewhat differently, I guess.

To me, my money goes where it gets me the most (I have to, I'm a capitalist). What Grizzly does provides a valuable service. People that wouldn't otherwise be able to afford machines can (I have a Grizzly lathe and mill). Don't even start talking to me about old American iron. I live in New Mexico -- it doesn't exist here.

You're right, importing machines probably made some businesses close their doors. It's sad, but business is tough. Why should people pay more because some business can't compete?

This same argument is used against Walmart. In my town, we have a couple of Walmarts and a couple of grocery stores have closed their doors. We also have some specialty shops that were opened by people that didn't try to compete with Walmart but do things that Walmart can't (large selection of imported products). The bottom line is now we have the best of both worlds. Lower income people shop at Walmart and save money. People that can afford it shop at the specialty stores. Everybody wins.

What the US needs to do is find those things with which we can compete and quit complaining about those things where we can't.

Brad</div></div>

I dont see what I am saying as complaining. I too am a capitalist, in business for 18 years and currently operating successfully.

If you are in a position where you only have certain options available to you to open your business or to keep your business open, of course you do what is necessary. Thats not an issue and never is as long as what you do is ethical.
If you are ok with the Wallmart scenairo, hope they dont find a cheap Asian imported version of your product. If you feel you are insulated from knock offs, good for you (at least for now...).
The issue is not so much for what you or any of us do to get a business rolling, but what we can do when we have the economics to move to the next level.
I have learned alot from industry over the years. It is true that most industries are capitalistic. But, if everything and every product was driven by a pure capitalistic model, we would have very little in this country.

I wish you the best of luck with your endeavors..

Check this link out when you get a chance:
http://www.usdebtclock.org/
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Darkstar</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
I most certainly disagree. I see you have a feel for the economic food chain.
The issue I see with the scenairo you described is that China is at the top of the food chain and the US is sitting at the bottom being spoon fed by trickle down effect. All the jobs you mentioned for as important as they are to the individuals are in a large part dependent on a foreign power that is far from what would be considered one of the true US allies.
For the US, this is not the position of a world power, this a position of dependence.

</div></div>

From an import/export standpoint, I agree 100%. The problem, as it pertains to the topic at hand is that you contribute nothing to the US economy by buying old American iron. The used market isn't contributing to growing the US manufacturing part of the economy. I like old USA made machines, I think some of them are works of art. However, I sold my Monarch 16 CY lathe several months ago because it wouldn't give me what I wanted for a price I could afford. What it would cost to get that lathe, which was in pretty decent shape, back into the shape it came from the factory and be able to hold those tollerances would far surpass the cost of a Grizzly gunsmithing lathe. The cost of wear parts alone would probably cost in the thousands, the cost of having the bed ground, and then the apron, headstock and tailstock fitted would have cost many thousands more.

Good used equipment is hard to come by for the hobbiest/home machinist. We aren't in the "loop" on machinery for sale or get first dibs on shop equipment being liquidated. That leaves us ebay, craigslist, and maybe some word of mouth for the used equipment, the importers for the new. For the price of a 4 wheeler I can buy a new lathe from Grizzly or Jet or one of the other importers that will do everything I need it to do and last my lifetime. For the price of a new truck I can buy a used, but excellent condition old American lathe or have one fixed up to excellent condition. For the price of a small house I can buy a new top quality lathe. If it's not something you have to have ***right now*** then you will eventually run across one of those pristine old southbends or hardinges that someones widow wants out of the garage and it was only used to cut plastic. Until then you have 3 choices: spend lots of <span style="text-decoration: underline">time </span> looking for that pristine peice of old iron, spend lots of <span style="text-decoration: underline"> $$money$$</span> on that pristine peice of old iron, or get an import lathe that isn't quite a hardinge for little time and less money. I'm not absolutely sure what my next choice will be either since while I do like the price and conveneince of the import stuff, I still like the old American made machines.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Bryan27</div><div class="ubbcode-body"> I'm not absolutely sure what my next choice will be either since while I do like the price and conveneince of the import stuff, I still like the old American made machines. </div></div>

And that is what makes this country great - CHOICE. We buy what we can, or what we want when we can.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Darkstar</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I most certainly disagree. I see you have a feel for the economic food chain.
The issue I see with the scenairo you described is that China is at the top of the food chain and the US is sitting at the bottom being spoon fed by trickle down effect. All the jobs you mentioned for as important as they are to the individuals are in a large part dependent on a foreign power that is far from what would be considered one of the true US allies.
For the US, this is not the position of a world power, this a position of dependence.

If you dont have this link I pasted below I would ask you and all to copy it and watch it every now and then. Its a reality check to our actions internal and external. There is alot of information here and sometines it may be alot to take in. If you think what it shows at present is bad, bare in mind this does not include yet the cost of the new health care bill that was shoved down our throats.

On the right is the dept to gdp ratio both public and external. The scenario you described to me that you seem to feel is acceptable continues to drive the US % higher and drive Chinas % lower.
Ultimately what made US the prominent world power after WW2 is now what is making China the upcoming prominent world power.</div></div>

The machinery battle was lost decades ago. I have been doing this since 1975. Back then I was reparing and rebuilding American built lathes, production for the most part had shifted to Japan and was getting expensive in Japan. I am talking manual machines (not CNC). Taiwan was the new and upcoming country then and the Japanese were opening factories in Taiwan because of the cheap labor. We are almost at the point today where Japan was back then as production is shifting from Taiwan to China because of the cheaper labor.

BUT WAIT - it ain't over!

The Chinese are getting the hang of capitalism and the workers are enjoying having money in their pockets and spending it. What happens when you spend money? You want more. So, the recent trend has been to want more pay, less hours and more benefits. Yes - this is happening in China as we speak. This is pushing the cost of merchandise higher. Where there was a 30 to 40% difference in cost between Taiwan made machines and China made machines has been dwindling and is down to a few percentage points. This has caused some companies to move to different countries like Vietnam. We have actually moved a few production items of our machines back to Taiwan because the quality can be controlled better and the quality IS better there.

For manual machines (mostly lathes I'm talking about), it's lights out for us here in the USA. Has been for decades.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body">The Chinese are getting the hang of capitalism and the workers are enjoying <span style="text-decoration: underline">having money in their pockets</span> and spending it. What happens when you spend money?</div></div>
Too bad that that money came out from our pockets/wealth.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Bryan27</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Darkstar</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
I most certainly disagree. I see you have a feel for the economic food chain.
The issue I see with the scenairo you described is that China is at the top of the food chain and the US is sitting at the bottom being spoon fed by trickle down effect. All the jobs you mentioned for as important as they are to the individuals are in a large part dependent on a foreign power that is far from what would be considered one of the true US allies.
For the US, this is not the position of a world power, this a position of dependence.

</div></div>

From an import/export standpoint, I agree 100%. The problem, as it pertains to the topic at hand is that you contribute nothing to the US economy by buying old American iron. The used market isn't contributing to growing the US manufacturing part of the economy. I like old USA made machines, I think some of them are works of art. However, I sold my Monarch 16 CY lathe several months ago because it wouldn't give me what I wanted for a price I could afford. What it would cost to get that lathe, which was in pretty decent shape, back into the shape it came from the factory and be able to hold those tollerances would far surpass the cost of a Grizzly gunsmithing lathe. The cost of wear parts alone would probably cost in the thousands, the cost of having the bed ground, and then the apron, headstock and tailstock fitted would have cost many thousands more.

Good used equipment is hard to come by for the hobbiest/home machinist. We aren't in the "loop" on machinery for sale or get first dibs on shop equipment being liquidated. That leaves us ebay, craigslist, and maybe some word of mouth for the used equipment, the importers for the new. For the price of a 4 wheeler I can buy a new lathe from Grizzly or Jet or one of the other importers that will do everything I need it to do and last my lifetime. For the price of a new truck I can buy a used, but excellent condition old American lathe or have one fixed up to excellent condition. For the price of a small house I can buy a new top quality lathe. If it's not something you have to have ***right now*** then you will eventually run across one of those pristine old southbends or hardinges that someones widow wants out of the garage and it was only used to cut plastic. Until then you have 3 choices: spend lots of <span style="text-decoration: underline">time </span> looking for that pristine peice of old iron, spend lots of <span style="text-decoration: underline"> $$money$$</span> on that pristine peice of old iron, or get an import lathe that isn't quite a hardinge for little time and less money. I'm not absolutely sure what my next choice will be either since while I do like the price and conveneince of the import stuff, I still like the old American made machines. </div></div>

Bryan27,
Thank you for the feedback.
The used machine tool industry does contribute to growing the manufacturing base. There is still a high percentage of start ups in manufacturing in this country that begin operations with used equipment. As far as the US economy goes, when your standing on our US soil with your US currency buying used equipment from a US company, you are contributing to the US economy at levels that far exceeds buying a product from China through one of their US based distributors.

If rebuilding your existing gear is cost prohibitive for your operations, then there you have it. If you dont have what you need to do your manufacturing operations and feel you "HAVE TO" buy Chinese to move forward, then there you have that too. Its def not for me to tell you what to do. We all do what we have to do based on our circumstances. Getting in the loop is not as hard as you think. All areas are different. Memphis and the surrounding areas for a few hunderd mile radius has some large industrial circles. Yes, it does require effort to make the right contacts, but it may bring you more contacts, information and opportunities than you might have thought could happen. There is alot more out there than ebay and craigslist.

One thing is for sure. With our help and based on how we spend our money, China is eating our breakfast and lunch. At the current rate, it will not be long before they eat our dinner too. When that happens, there will be more at stake than questioning whats a hobbiest to do.

We all need to keep this in mind as we move forward spending our money. How we spend and who we do business with is paramount to our nations future. It's quite obivous the government wont do it. Look at how our president and his cabinet caved into China this year.
It's up to us to set the standards and to change this clock.

http://www.usdebtclock.org/

 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Darkstar</div><div class="ubbcode-body">

Bryan27,
Thank you for the feedback.
The used machine tool industry does contribute to growing the manufacturing base. There is still a high percentage of start ups in manufacturing in this country that begin operations with used equipment. As far as the US economy goes, when your standing on our US soil with your US currency buying used equipment from a US company, you are contributing to the US economy at levels that far exceeds buying a product from China through one of their US based distributors.

If rebuilding your existing gear is cost prohibitive for your operations, then there you have it. If you dont have what you need to do your manufacturing operations and feel you "HAVE TO" buy Chinese to move forward, then there you have that too. Its def not for me to tell you what to do. We all do what we have to do based on our circumstances. Getting in the loop is not as hard as you think. All areas are different. Memphis and the surrounding areas for a few hunderd mile radius has some large industrial circles. Yes, it does require effort to make the right contacts, but it may bring you more contacts, information and opportunities than you might have thought could happen. There is alot more out there than ebay and craigslist.

One thing is for sure. With our help and based on how we spend our money, China is eating our breakfast and lunch. At the current rate, it will not be long before they eat our dinner too. When that happens, there will be more at stake than questioning whats a hobbiest to do.

We all need to keep this in mind as we move forward spending our money. How we spend and who we do business with is paramount to our nations future. It's quite obivous the government wont do it. Look at how our president and his cabinet caved into China this year.
It's up to us to set the standards and to change this clock.

http://www.usdebtclock.org/

</div></div>

If the machine tool is used to manufacture a product or provide a service then THAT activity is what is contributing to the American economy, not the purchase of the used machinery. When that peice of machinery was originally built and sold is when it contributed its part to the American economy, at that point it had turned raw material, ingenuity and hard work into a product. Not only that, but with its original purchase it prevented the potential of those American dollars from leaving the country.

I may need to brush up on my economics, admittedly, but spending US dollars on US soil from a US machinery dealer buying USED US iron isn't going to contribute to the GDP, which imo is where we should be focussing our dollars. You'd be moving money from your checking account to your savings account, basically. The only thing you'd be doing is supporting the machinery dealer in a no growth activity.....you'd have to follow one hell of a paper trail to know how many American dollars benefitted Americans from the time a used machinery dealer bought and sold the machine and compare that to what an importer does. My guess is that the importer contributes more to the American worker when comparing dollar volume to dollar volume with the used machine dealer....that's just my hunch though.

If the rest of the economic sectors could take just one thing from the firearms industry and I got to choose what it would be, the amount of US based manufacture is what I would apply to them. You can pick up a foreign made component in one hand, a US made one in the other and just feel the quality of American craftsmanship without ever having to look at it. I am a big supporter of American manufacturing and the American worker to the point that on some things I'd just assume go without if I can't afford US made rather than buy imported, but on some things we just can't compete/won't compete on price.

Some things you may find of interest to research, if you haven't already are the %'s of dollars that came from tarriffs -vs- taxes over our history, how the trade agreements effected those numbers and our trade deficit. The trends aren't going to be surprising but it will piss you off when looking at how the numbers trend over time and the agreements and law that drove the numbers. American manufacturing isn't being LOST it's being GIVEN away. Sooner or later we are going to have to say f*** China and f*** this "global economy" and take care of ourselves. At that point we will have to deal with all the countries holding our debt, but we will have to deal with it now or deal with it later......may as well deal with it now that we're broke to begin with.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: HotIce</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
Too bad that that money came out from our pockets/wealth.</div></div>

We didn't exactly Western Union them the money!

We got something in return, and made a conscious decision to purchase it.

Our society has a penchant for low priced goods, by need or by choice, and buys it in large quantities. There are many reasons that have caused a lot of the industrial manufacturing to go overseas, but that boat has long left the harbor.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Papagrizzly</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: HotIce</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
Too bad that that money came out from our pockets/wealth.</div></div>

We didn't exactly Western Union them the money!

We got something in return, and made a conscious decision to purchase it.

Our society has a penchant for low priced goods, by need or by choice, and buys it in large quantities. There are many reasons that have caused a lot of the industrial manufacturing to go overseas, but that boat has long left the harbor. </div></div>
See my above post.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Bryan27</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Darkstar</div><div class="ubbcode-body">

Bryan27,
Thank you for the feedback.
The used machine tool industry does contribute to growing the manufacturing base. There is still a high percentage of start ups in manufacturing in this country that begin operations with used equipment. As far as the US economy goes, when your standing on our US soil with your US currency buying used equipment from a US company, you are contributing to the US economy at levels that far exceeds buying a product from China through one of their US based distributors.

If rebuilding your existing gear is cost prohibitive for your operations, then there you have it. If you dont have what you need to do your manufacturing operations and feel you "HAVE TO" buy Chinese to move forward, then there you have that too. Its def not for me to tell you what to do. We all do what we have to do based on our circumstances. Getting in the loop is not as hard as you think. All areas are different. Memphis and the surrounding areas for a few hunderd mile radius has some large industrial circles. Yes, it does require effort to make the right contacts, but it may bring you more contacts, information and opportunities than you might have thought could happen. There is alot more out there than ebay and craigslist.

One thing is for sure. With our help and based on how we spend our money, China is eating our breakfast and lunch. At the current rate, it will not be long before they eat our dinner too. When that happens, there will be more at stake than questioning whats a hobbiest to do.

We all need to keep this in mind as we move forward spending our money. How we spend and who we do business with is paramount to our nations future. It's quite obivous the government wont do it. Look at how our president and his cabinet caved into China this year.
It's up to us to set the standards and to change this clock.

http://www.usdebtclock.org/

</div></div>

If the machine tool is used to manufacture a product or provide a service then THAT activity is what is contributing to the American economy, not the purchase of the used machinery. When that peice of machinery was originally built and sold is when it contributed its part to the American economy, at that point it had turned raw material, ingenuity and hard work into a product. Not only that, but with its original purchase it prevented the potential of those American dollars from leaving the country.

I may need to brush up on my economics, admittedly, but spending US dollars on US soil from a US machinery dealer buying USED US iron isn't going to contribute to the GDP, which imo is where we should be focussing our dollars. You'd be moving money from your checking account to your savings account, basically. The only thing you'd be doing is supporting the machinery dealer in a no growth activity.....you'd have to follow one hell of a paper trail to know how many American dollars benefitted Americans from the time a used machinery dealer bought and sold the machine and compare that to what an importer does. My guess is that the importer contributes more to the American worker when comparing dollar volume to dollar volume with the used machine dealer....that's just my hunch though.

If the rest of the economic sectors could take just one thing from the firearms industry and I got to choose what it would be, the amount of US based manufacture is what I would apply to them. You can pick up a foreign made component in one hand, a US made one in the other and just feel the quality of American craftsmanship without ever having to look at it. I am a big supporter of American manufacturing and the American worker to the point that on some things I'd just assume go without if I can't afford US made rather than buy imported, but on some things we just can't compete/won't compete on price.

Some things you may find of interest to research, if you haven't already are the %'s of dollars that came from tarriffs -vs- taxes over our history, how the trade agreements effected those numbers and our trade deficit. The trends aren't going to be surprising but it will piss you off when looking at how the numbers trend over time and the agreements and law that drove the numbers. American manufacturing isn't being LOST it's being GIVEN away. Sooner or later we are going to have to say f*** China and f*** this "global economy" and take care of ourselves. At that point we will have to deal with all the countries holding our debt, but we will have to deal with it now or deal with it later......may as well deal with it now that we're broke to begin with. </div></div>

Bryan27,
Yes. If you are buying used machinery, that sale supports a business that is part of a local economy. If you are using it producing a product for sale it now supports local and the gdp. Either way, both are good and you are not supporting China. Yes, the economic incentives to use China (or Asia as a whole) are so frustrating it defies words. I have been directly dealing with these incentives and American Manufacturing for over 20 years now. The best we can do is keep conversations like this alive and get it in more citizens hands and all of us begin to talk about what it will take to get the right politicians in office that actually want to reinstate The American Manufacturing Base as a core to their economic strategy. It dont happen if we dont do it. Like I said before, It's quite obivous our current government wont do it. Look at how our president and his cabinet caved into China this year.

If Grizzly and others like them were producing their machinery here in the US, I would personally look at them differently. They do not. They are attempting to maximize their profits as they scavenge their part of the globe in search of the next country to be their new asian wetback labor. All the time their quality suffers and we still buy it. Hearing South Bend is now South Bend Taiwan and they are our well accepted US buddy so please dont hesitate to buy dont float my boat either. If they too were building here with asian, american and euro components, I would be looking to benchmark them for use. I know what I am saying involves much, much more and profits will not be as quickly maximized in their favor, so I wont hold my breath on that one.

I was returning home late last week and while in the airport I read the market weeks bump was a result of China stating they had somewhere around a 50% increase in exports. That being said, they are a tumor you just dont cut off without disasterous results to us the host. We do have to do it, but we got ourselves in deep. It will take time to do so we dont damage ourselves any worst then we already have. We did this and we can undo this.

As far as you or others looking for used machinery goes, try the Thomas Register for used machine tool dealers in your area. You will more than likely get better results. I put a call into a friend about used machinery in Memphis area and if I hear anything solid I will PM you.

Now as far as arms manufacturing here in the US is concerned, dont drop your guard. There is not a US indusrty sector that Asia has not bastardized and capitalized on. The ones I have witnessed over the years that fell the easiest were the ones with the largest hubris. I would not be the least bit suprised to see barrles, actions, stocks, bottom metal, accessories, etc being imported from China and if you follow the money trail, like always you will find it happens from within your own community.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

How about a HAAS TL-1 I've heard some good things about that manual/CNC lathe, as well as some bad things. Price seems to be some what affordable as well.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

I bought a Southbend Heavy10 and love it. Probably the best choice I could have made as far as lathes go. It runs smooth and quit. I also like using HSS. It cuts slower but nice.

I paid a good amount of money for it and shipped it across the country to get it here. I don't regret it.

Go Southbend if you can find one.

Good luck,
JamieD

 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

Well, after working with my new Grizzly for a couple of days, I must admit I am impressed. This lathe is gonna build some tack driving machines.

I aggonized over which lathe to buy but I am a happy camper tonight!

I would recommened one if you want to gun smith or barrel fit.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Darkstar</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
Yes. If you are buying used machinery, that sale supports a business that is part of a local economy. If you are using it producing a product for sale it now supports local and the gdp. Either way, both are good and you are not supporting China. Yes, the economic incentives to use China (or Asia as a whole) are so frustrating it defies words. I have been directly dealing with these incentives and American Manufacturing for over 20 years now. The best we can do is keep conversations like this alive and get it in more citizens hands and all of us begin to talk about what it will take to get the right politicians in office that actually want to reinstate The American Manufacturing Base as a core to their economic strategy. It dont happen if we dont do it. Like I said before, It's quite obivous our current government wont do it. Look at how our president and his cabinet caved into China this year.

If Grizzly and others like them were producing their machinery here in the US, I would personally look at them differently. They do not. They are attempting to maximize their profits as they scavenge their part of the globe in search of the next country to be their new asian wetback labor. All the time their quality suffers and we still buy it. Hearing South Bend is now South Bend Taiwan and they are our well accepted US buddy so please dont hesitate to buy dont float my boat either. If they too were building here with asian, american and euro components, I would be looking to benchmark them for use. I know what I am saying involves much, much more and profits will not be as quickly maximized in their favor, so I wont hold my breath on that one.

I was returning home late last week and while in the airport I read the market weeks bump was a result of China stating they had somewhere around a 50% increase in exports. That being said, they are a tumor you just dont cut off without disasterous results to us the host. We do have to do it, but we got ourselves in deep. It will take time to do so we dont damage ourselves any worst then we already have. We did this and we can undo this.

As far as you or others looking for used machinery goes, try the Thomas Register for used machine tool dealers in your area. You will more than likely get better results. I put a call into a friend about used machinery in Memphis area and if I hear anything solid I will PM you.

Now as far as arms manufacturing here in the US is concerned, dont drop your guard. There is not a US indusrty sector that Asia has not bastardized and capitalized on. The ones I have witnessed over the years that fell the easiest were the ones with the largest hubris. I would not be the least bit suprised to see barrles, actions, stocks, bottom metal, accessories, etc being imported from China and if you follow the money trail, like always you will find it happens from within your own community. </div></div>

I think we are attacking this issue from different angles is all. If a better option exists that is American made then by all means use it, but I'm more pro American than I am anti China. I don't know this to ba a fact because I'm not in the manufacturing industry, but from what I understand China is making parts so cheap because their government subsidizes them. I've heard talk of parts being bid overseas that wouldn't cover the materials here in America. To me there is something wrong with that picture. Add to that all the regulations that American manufactures have to abide by and subsequently pay for and it just doesn't look good nor does it resemble an even playing field.

When I talk about the firearms industry here in America, I should have clarified the scale I was refering to. I'm not talking about the Remingtons and Winchesters of the industry, I'm talking about the Seekins, Rifles Inc, GAP and other builders and parts makers of that magnitude that are keeping it in America and providing their customers the kind of quality that doesn't come out of asia. Those are the type of companies that impress me and get me thinking possitive. They aren't billion dollar businesses, but they have the ability to stay afloat, employ people either directly or indirectly and they all have plenty of room to grow and expand into whatever their owners have the talent to make of them. That is just a few businesses in one tiny sector of the economy, there are others like offroad parts makers, aviation parts, toolmakers, custom furniture makers and boat builders just to name a few that keep it all in America.

I'm all for putting China back in their respective place as it pertains to the American economy, if that means severing the "tumor" and all that goes with it then so be it. I don't think that we need to necessarily stop trade with them, but make it more equitable. I don't see any logic in having that much of our countries economy dependant on China, especially when we have so many people here on welfare or looking for work.

All that said, I still don't think that the act of buying an American lathe from a middle man grows the US economy, only the middle mans bank account........unless he adds value to the item he isn't doing anything but feathering his own nest.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

In my search for a lathe on different web's, it seems to allways turn to a U.S. vs "them" thing.

The good old U.S. of A. don't make stuff like in WWI or WWII.

It is a shame since we were the industriel might back then. If you want to go back to like it was, lets talk.

Can you produce a lathe? At a profit?

Then shut up and lets go to work. No excuses.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: sailhertoo</div><div class="ubbcode-body">In my search for a lathe on different web's, it seems to allways turn to a U.S. vs "them" thing.

The good old U.S. of A. don't make stuff like in WWI or WWII.

It is a shame since we were the industriel might back then. If you want to go back to like it was, lets talk.

Can you produce a lathe? At a profit?

Then shut up and lets go to work. No excuses.</div></div>

Now that is both an eloquent and pertinent post. Shoulda-Coulda-Woulda is one thing, while what IS, is another thing all together.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: sailhertoo</div><div class="ubbcode-body">In my search for a lathe on different web's, it seems to allways turn to a U.S. vs "them" thing.

The good old U.S. of A. don't make stuff like in WWI or WWII.

It is a shame since we were the industriel might back then. If you want to go back to like it was, lets talk.

Can you produce a lathe? At a profit?

Then shut up and lets go to work. No excuses. </div></div>



Well Said!!

Most of these guys that talk about making machinery here in the USA have no idea what we are up against in building machines here today.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

The Hardinge is a super lathe, super precision. You can dial in .0001 and remove that much metal. I would rather buy an older Hardinge, do some refurbishing, than any Eastern import.

I used to be a machine tool mechanic, so I have a pretty good idea of what I am talking about.
 
Re: New Chinese lathe or old south bend?

I am also doing my research for a lathe. So far the Grizzly has my eye for the range of machining that can be done. While I want to get into gunsmithing, I can't afford the top-of-the-line $20K+ three phase (nor the upgrade to my home power service). I have been asking every machinist I can find for advice on machines and options. Most agree that the most important things are the speed and the cutting tool. Also, what type of threads that are in the compund rest (acme vs unc). Personally, I am looking at options that will allow a milling attachment and the most types of thread cuts. $3000 is a lot to spend on something that you only use for a couple of very specific tasks. Thanks to all the machinists that gave recommendations on other brands. You have given me more to look at than just JET and Grizzly and South Bend and Harbor Freight and Northern Tool......

By the way, don't forget that China technically owns America now. That means that buying their stuff is technically buying American.
wink.gif


(And before you all form a posse: Yes, I still buy and support union stuff.)